A sequel,
C.H.U.D. II: Bud the C.H.U.D., was released in 1989. Although
C.H.U.D. was negatively received during its initial release, it attracted a
cult following over the years, inspired the name of
a film website (which changed the acronym's meaning to Cinematic Happenings Under Development) and a political epithet, and references to it have appeared in
The Simpsons,
The CW's
The Flash,
Aqua Teen Hunger Force,
Clerks II,
Castle,
Archer,
Futurama,
Pushing Daisies, Outer Banks,
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., and
Rick and Morty. Martin Cooper's score was later named number 33 in
Rolling Stone's 35 Greatest Horror Soundtracks. The film was also the subject of an April Fool's hoax announcement by
The Criterion Collection. In 2007,
Rob Zombie was rumored to be considering a remake, and, in 2008, a different remake was rumored to be in production. C.H.U.D. appears in the 2003 video game ''
Tony Hawk's Underground under the name T.H.U.D. A VHS copy of C.H.U.D.'' appears in the opening shot of Jordan Peele's 2019 horror film
Us. The found footage horror film
Dwellers has been publicly referenced by its writer and director
Drew Fortier as being heavily influenced by C.H.U.D. The anthology
C.H.U.D. LIVES!: A Tribute Anthology, edited by Joe Mynhardt, was released in 2018 and featured an introduction by
David Drake, an interview with the late C.H.U.D. movie producer Andrew Bonime, an interview horror author
Eric S. Brown did with C.H.U.D. screenwriter
Parnell Hall and nineteen stories set in the universe of the movie C.H.U.D. Contributors included Robert E. Waters, Nick Cato, Ryan C. Thomas, David Robbins, Christopher Fulbright, Angeline Hawkes, Greg Mitchell, Alex Laybourne, Michael H. Hanson, Ben Fisher,
Tim Waggoner, Jason White, Mort Castle, David Bernstein, Martin Powell, Chad Lutzke, J.G. Faherty, Phillip C. Perron, Ross Baxter,
Jonathan Maberry, and Eugene Johnson. The upcoming film
Bunker Heights has been regarded by
Dread Central as being a spiritual successor to C.H.U.D. In late 2019, the term "
chud" in reference to the film started to see usage in internet culture to derogatorily refer to individuals involved in
far-right politics. Years later, a variant of the
wojak meme modelled after
Patrick Crusius titled "
Chudjak" emerged. Like the contemporary usage of the word chud, the Chudjak meme has been used to satirise and mock users of
/pol/ for their far-right politics. ==See also==